Well, at least if your mom is a swine. Still better than a rat:
Maternal low-protein diet affects myostatin signaling and protein synthesis in offspring's skeletal muscle - Ok, we are talking about swine, but (a) many human beings behave much worse than swine and (b) swine are actually a much better model of human metabolism than rodents and many primates (the real reason they are not the standard model is that they are too large and too long-lived, which means they need too much space, the studies last too long and get much too expensive).
It is thus more than likely that a very similar effect on myostatin and protein synthesis as it was observed by Liu et al. in their latest study in the European Journal of Nutrition where the swine who were fed a protein-deficient diet with only 6% of the energy from protein gave birth to piglets with (a) significantly reduced body weight, (b) significantly reduced muscle weight, (c) extremely reduced relative muscle weight (to body weight) and (d) small muscle with miniscule intramuscular domains.

Figure 1: Body weight, muscle weight (LD), myofiber cross sectional are and rel. muscle weight (LD/BW) of piglets born to sows on protein sufficient (12% | SP) and deficient (6% | LP) diets (Liu. 2015).
While you can see all of that in Figure 1, the reasons for the lack of muscularity can be seen in Figure 2 which tells you that the piglets that were born to mothers on the low protein (LP) diet had significantly increased myostatin (remember myostatin blocks protein synthesis) and accordingly reduced S6K levels.
With the former being the controller and the latter being the executor of protein synthesis, the results of Liu's study leave little room for speculation: A diet that contains only 6% protein - for humans ~20-30g (depending on your baseline intake) - may increase your offspring's risk of becoming under-muscled and skinny fat... what? No, I didn't say "beware vegans" - that was you!